Monthly Archives: June 2013

We’ve been talking to some people recently who really wanted to know what the potential market size was for PythonAnywhere, our Python Platform-as-a-Service and cloud-based IDE.

There are a bunch of different ways to look at that, but the most obvious starting point is, “how many people are coding Python?” This blog post is an attempt to get some kind of order-of-magnitude number for that.

First things first: Wikipedia has an estimate of 10 million Java developers (though I couldn’t find the numbers to back that up on the cited pages) but nothing for Python — or, indeed, any of the other languages I checked. So nothing there.

A bit of Googling around gets one interesting hit; in this Stack Overflow answer, “Tall Jeff” says that the 2007 version of Learning Python estimated that there were 1 million Python programmers in the world. Using Amazon’s “Look inside” feature on the current edition, they still have the same number but for the present day, but let’s assume that they were right originally and the number has grown since then. Now, according to the Python wiki, there were 586 people at the 2007 PyCon. According to the front page at PyCon.org, there were 2,500 people at PyCon 2013. So if we take that as a proxy for the growth of the language, we get one guess of the number of Python developers: 4.3 million.

Averaging that over a year gives us 34,466,213 downloads per year. It’s worth noting that these are overwhelmingly Windows downloads — most Linux users are going to be using the versions packaged as part of their distro, and (I think, but correct me if I’m wrong) the same is largely going to be the case on the Mac.

The results were unfortunately completely useless. 338,000 hits but the only actual CV/resume on the first page was Guido van Rossum’s — everything else was about the OpenCV computer vision library, or about resuming things.

Python developers as per the latest LangPop.com ranking: 7% (taken by an approximate ratio of the Python score to the sum of the scores of all languages), which gives 2,841,410

OK, so there I’m multiplying one very approximate number of programmers by a “percentage” rating that doesn’t claim to be a percentage of programmers using a given language. But this ain’t rocket science, I can mix and match units if I want.

The good news is, we’re in the same order of magnitude; we’ve got numbers of 1.8 million, 2.8 million, 3.5 million, and 4.3 million. So, based on some super-unscientific guesswork, I think I can happily say that the number of Python programmers in the world is in the low millions.

What do you think? Are there other ways of working this out that I’ve missed? Does anyone have (gasp!) hard numbers?